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How to Get Buy-In For Your Strategic Financial Goals

Introduction

As a small business owner, one of the most critical elements of your company’s success is the alignment of your team with your goals for your company. If you’ve ever felt that (a) you lack employee buy-in on strategic initiatives or (b) that your employees are not acting like owners, you likely have an opportunity to improve your company’s performance by implementing or revising your incentive compensation plan(s).

Why Incentive Compensation Matters

Common Pitfalls

To understand how to create a well-designed incentive plan, it is important to understand some of the common pitfalls:

Revenue-Centric Plans

In particular, it is quite common for salespeople to be incentivized based on sales without adequate consideration for how profitable those sales are. These types of incentives allow for gamesmanship and can reward the wrong behaviors (e.g. Prioritizing large sales volumes at lower gross profit margins).

To realign salespeople with broader company profitability, consider restructuring sales commissions around gross profit. This small shift can have seismic results by ensuring that your team’s sales efforts are properly aligned behind profitable sales.

Opposing Departmental Incentives

If interdepartmental friction is an issue, consider instead aligning your incentive plans behind common goals (i.e., the operational team is also incentivized by project gross profit [but counterbalanced by accountability for issues on the project]). Also, consider creating a quarterly or annual team or company-wide incentives that celebrate company achievements and encourage departments to work together cohesively.

Unreachable Incentives

Lack Of Control Incentives

Like unreachable incentives, employees may not be motivated by an incentive whose outcome they don’t substantially control. Company profitability metrics are an excellent example of this. While it is great to include company profitability as an aspect of your company’s incentive compensation plan, it is common that any employee does not meaningfully control the entire company’s profitability. For less intrinsically motivated and team-oriented individuals, there is likely insufficient control to motivate the employee to put in additional effort to achieve the desired incentive.

To avoid this issue, we recommend creating a two-pronged incentive compensation plan: (a) a monthly or quarterly incentive that is tied to a metric or metrics that is/are controllable by the employee and (b) a quarterly or annual incentive that is tied to company profitability. This structure creates an environment where the employee is motivated to drive improvement in their areas of control while simultaneously having a stake in the company’s overall success.

Linking Incentives To Strategic Planning

Conclusion

Incentive compensation is a strategic lever that small business owners can pull to align their team’s efforts with the company’s overarching goals. By integrating well-designed incentive compensation plan(s) into your strategic planning process, you can ensure that every employee is aware of and driven to achieve the company’s objectives. This alignment ensures that every team member is informed about where the company is headed and personally invested in the journey.

Call To Action

Think about how your current incentive structures drive business outcomes. Are they aligned with your strategic goals? If not, it might be time for a redesign. At gray feather CFO, strategic financial planning is our business, and incentive compensation is one significant aspect of that process. Please reach out if you need help aligning your compensation strategies with your business objectives. Let’s ensure your incentives are designed to motivate your employees to act like an owner.